A Medical School faculty committee yesterday endorsed an experimental medical curriculum that will go before the full faculty Wednesday.
The proposal represents a modified version of a new curriculum suggested last May by Med School Dean Daniel C Tosteson '44.
Tosteson initially proposed a seven-year course of study emphasizing close faculty supervision, small classes, use of computers, problem-solving, the case-study approach and independent study.
But last week, after nearly a year of student-faculty committee meetings, the Med School's faculty-student curriculum committee gave preliminary approval to a five-year version of the plan.
And yesterday, the Med School Faculty Council, a 41-member body of junior and senior faculty members, approved the proposal by a unanimous voice vote, according to Myra B. Ramos, assistant to the dean for academic programs.
Although the new plan would only create a five-year curriculum, the modified proposal does require the faculty to discuss the feasibility of a seven-year plan.
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